- Reaction score
- 114
- Points
- 680
"Friendly Fire" by Michael Friscolanti has just been released.
"Based on dozens of exclusive interviews and thousands of pages of previously classified testimony, Friendly Fire also reveals what was said inside closed-door interrogation rooms as military investigators probed the explosion. Until now, the public has never been privy to those conversations.
The book also recalls the night of the bombing, including the heroic actions of many Canadian soldiers who scrambled to save some of their wounded comrades.
The military prosecutors who fought to have the pilots thrown in jail also tell their side of the story."
http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/item.asp?Item=978047083686&in_merch=1&Catalog=Books&N=35+528250&Lang=en&Section=books&zxac=1
"The accidental killing of four Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan by an American Top Gun pilot in a friendly fire incident badly shook the U.S.-Canadian alliance. While the pilot and his wingman walked away with a sentence of forced retirement and demotionsâ “ instead of a possible 64-year prison termâ “ the families and comrades of the dead soldiers still struggle to come to terms with their loss. The first in-depth investigation of t tragedy by an award-winning journalist, Friendly Fire offers an unflinching look at the military catastrophe that transformed lives on both sides of the border. Based on classified documents, never-before-seen photographs, and dozens of exclusive interviews, Friendly Fire dramatically recreates the tragic event and its chilling and haunting aftermath."
http://www.canada.com/components/printstory/printstory4.aspx?id=1ebe3fdd-584d-4cb0-85ce-644a36d2b25e
Well, I'm going to pick it up today and give it a read based on it's many interviews and due to it's adressing of heroic actions which also occured that day by many fellow Canadian Soldiers. I'll let you know if it makes me feel any more comfortable about the whole tragedy.
"Based on dozens of exclusive interviews and thousands of pages of previously classified testimony, Friendly Fire also reveals what was said inside closed-door interrogation rooms as military investigators probed the explosion. Until now, the public has never been privy to those conversations.
The book also recalls the night of the bombing, including the heroic actions of many Canadian soldiers who scrambled to save some of their wounded comrades.
The military prosecutors who fought to have the pilots thrown in jail also tell their side of the story."
http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/item.asp?Item=978047083686&in_merch=1&Catalog=Books&N=35+528250&Lang=en&Section=books&zxac=1
"The accidental killing of four Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan by an American Top Gun pilot in a friendly fire incident badly shook the U.S.-Canadian alliance. While the pilot and his wingman walked away with a sentence of forced retirement and demotionsâ “ instead of a possible 64-year prison termâ “ the families and comrades of the dead soldiers still struggle to come to terms with their loss. The first in-depth investigation of t tragedy by an award-winning journalist, Friendly Fire offers an unflinching look at the military catastrophe that transformed lives on both sides of the border. Based on classified documents, never-before-seen photographs, and dozens of exclusive interviews, Friendly Fire dramatically recreates the tragic event and its chilling and haunting aftermath."
http://www.canada.com/components/printstory/printstory4.aspx?id=1ebe3fdd-584d-4cb0-85ce-644a36d2b25e
Well, I'm going to pick it up today and give it a read based on it's many interviews and due to it's adressing of heroic actions which also occured that day by many fellow Canadian Soldiers. I'll let you know if it makes me feel any more comfortable about the whole tragedy.